The e-Stewards recyclers are a group of leading North American electronics recyclers and asset managers who have been qualified as upholding the highest standard of environmental and social responsibility. Environmental and social justice advocates urge you to make use of these recyclers for all of your e-waste disposal/recycling/asset management. Beware other recyclers claiming to be "green" and responsible. The e-Stewards recyclers are a group of leading North American electronics recyclers and asset managers who have been qualified as upholding the highest standard of environmental and social responsibility. Environmental and social justice advocates urge you to make use of these recyclers for all of your e-waste disposal/recycling/asset management. Beware other recyclers claiming to be "green" and responsible.
The Basel Action Network and the Electronics TakeBack Coalition have joined with Electronic Recyclers International of Fresno to create the "e-Stewards Initiative" - a certification program for North America's most responsible e-waste recyclers.
The e-Steward Initiative is described as the first independently audited and accredited electronic waste recycler certification program forbidding the dumping of toxic e-waste in developing countries, local landfills and incinerators; the use of prison labor; and the unauthorized release of private data.The Basel Action Network and the Electronics TakeBack Coalition have joined with Electronic Recyclers International of Fresno to create the "e-Stewards Initiative" - a certification program for North America's most responsible e-waste recyclers.
The e-Steward Initiative is described as the first independently audited and accredited electronic waste recycler certification program forbidding the dumping of toxic e-waste in developing countries, local landfills and incinerators; the use of prison labor; and the unauthorized release of private data.
Electronic Recyclers International (ERI), the nation's leading
recycler of electronic waste, joined Fresno Mayor Alan Autry and a host of other local business leaders to launch its new e-waste shredder - the largest and most efficient shredder of its kind in North America.
Mayor Autry cut the ribbon and hit the "on" switch for the
ceremonial launch, which took place today at ERI's new 125,440 square foot expansion facility at 3243 S. East Avenue in Fresno.
Dallas, Texas (PRWEB) September 4, 2009 -- Capstone Wireless, LLC is pleased to announce that the non-profit environmental watchdog Basel Action Network (BAN) has recognized Capstone Wireless as an e-Steward™ electronics recycler, a designation awarded to North American electronics recyclers and asset managers who have been qualified as upholding the highest standard of environmental and social responsibility.
Oregon e-Cycles has
a great website
up for consumers to help guide them through the whys and
hows of e-cycling. If you live in the area, simply
type in your zip
code
and you're given a listing of local collection points. Oregon has
another item that will launch next New Year's Day: on January 1, 2010, disposal
of computers, monitors and TVs
will be banned
.
Also launching on this New Years Day was
Washington's new
program
letting people drop off certain e-waste items for free. They too
have a
search database for
finding a local drop-off point
, as well as a call-in hotline.
ODATE, JP -- Many small pieces can add up to a big whole, and one small city in
the north of Japan is finding there's money in the process as
well.
Odate, a city of about 80,000 people in Akita Prefecture, on the
northern end of Honshu, the big island of Japan, has begun diverting small
electronics from landfills and using the town's mining history to salvage
precious metals from the waste.
By putting collection bins outside
supermarkets and community centers, the city gathering about 17 tons of e-waste
in 11 months, from April 2007 to February 2008, according to a
report from Harufumi Mori
in Japan's Asahi Shimbun newspaper.
The gadgets collected range from broken appliances to hair dryers to cell phones
-- all too small to fall under the scope of recycling laws in
Japan.
Although they're small, they're far from worthless, the city is
finding. After looking through just over one-third of the waste, Mori reports
that the city might find as much as half a kilogram of tantalum, one kilogram of
gold, and as much as 4 kilograms of silver and palladium. All from less than one
year of collections in one city among a gadget-crazy country with over 127
million residents.
As a former mining town, Odate is well equipped to
harvest precious metals from e-waste.
John S. Shegerian
(born November 16, 1962, in Queens, New
York) is an American entrepreneur, environmental and social issues activist,
international public speaker and the Chairman and CEO of
Electronic Recyclers
International®
(ERI). Established in 2002, ERI is an Electronic
Waste collector and recycler, specializing in the environmentally safe and
socially responsible dismantling of electronic items such as computers,
televisions, monitors, cell phones, and other unwanted or obsolete electronic
items. ERI is largely recognized as the leading recycler of electronics in the
state of California and one of the largest in North America. Shegerian, like
ERI, is based in Fresno, California.
This study, the first to investigate workplace contamination in areas
in Ghana where e-waste recycling and disposal is carried out, focussed on the main centre for this type of work, at the Agbogbloshie scrap market in Ghana's capital, Accra. One of the numerous similar, though far smaller, operations that take place throughout Ghana was also investigated, at the location of a scrap dealer in Korforidua, a smaller city to the north of Accra. At these
workshops, e-waste is recycled in a crude way, primarily involving manual disassembly and open burning to isolate copper from plastics. Much of the work is carried out by children, commonly using only rudimentary tools and with no protective equipment.
FREE RECYCLING OF television sets, laptop and desktop
computers and monitors is available in Jefferson and Clallam counties, thanks to
the state's new E-Cycle Washington program.
That means no one needs to
throw away such gear and add to already stuffed landfills.
Households,
businesses, school districts, government agencies and nonprofit groups can take
advantage of the free program.